Is it a bird? Is it a plane? No it’s Prince William

Damien Lucas

Prince William is back flying again for the East Anglian Air Ambulance

He was on unpaid leave after the birth of his daughter Princess Charlotte

After his training the Duke will be taking patients to hospital from across Bedfordshire

The Duke of Cambridge is returning to work as a pilot with East Anglian Air Ambulance after taking a break ahead of the birth of his daughter Princess Charlotte.

William took unpaid leave in April following the first phase of his training.

He is understood to be in the closing stages of his training to be a pilot with the ambulance team which serves Bedfordshire.

After his training the Duke will transport patients from the county to hospital.

He and his wife Kate welcomed the birth of Charlotte last month and have spent most of the time since away from the public eye at their home, Anmer Hall, on the Sandringham estate in Norfolk with their newborn and son George.

The Georgian country home was given to the couple by the Queen as a wedding present.

He previously served in the Royal Air Force, most recently as a search and rescue pilot and has had several official engagements since the birth of his second child, including awarding actress Sheridan Smith an OBE.

And the Duke, an Aston Villa supporter and president of the FA, watched his club endure a crushing 4-0 defeat at the hands on Arsenal in the FA Cup final at the weekend.

His return marks the end of a break of almost six weeks from his flying duties.

The EAAA serves the counties of Bedfordshire, Cambridgeshire, Norfolk and Suffolk, an area of 5,000 square miles, and needs to raise £8.6 million this year alone to continue its service.